History of Structuralism Volume 2 This Page Intentionally Left Blank History of Structuralism
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
DJFHKJSD History of Structuralism Volume 2 This page intentionally left blank History of Structuralism Volume 2: The Sign Sets, 1967-Present Francois Dosse Translated by Deborah Glassman University of Minnesota Press Minneapolis London The University of Minnesota Press gratefully acknowledges financial assistance provided by the French Ministry of Culture for the translation of this book. Copyright 1997 by the Regents of the University of Minnesota Originally published as Histoire du structuralisme, 11. Le chant du cygne, de 1967 anos jour«; Copyright Editions La Decouverte, Paris, 1992. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Published by the University of Minnesota Press III Third Avenue South, Suite 290, Minneapolis, MN 554°1-2520 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper http://www.upress.umn.edu First paperback edition, 1998 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Dosse, Francois, 1950- [Histoire du structuralisme. English] History of structuralism I Francois Dosse ; translated by Deborah Glassman. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. Contents: v. 1. The rising sign, 1945-1966-v. 2. The sign sets, 1967-present. ISBN 0-8166-2239-6 (v. I: he: alk. paper}.-ISBN 0-8166-2241-8 (v. I: pbk. : alk. paper}.-ISBN 0-8166-2370-8 (v. 2: hc: alk. paper}.-ISBN 0-8166-2371-6 (v. 2: pbk. : alk. paper}.-ISBN 0-8166-2240-X (set: hc: alk. paper}.-ISBN 0-8166-2254-X (set: pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Structuralism-History. 1. Title. B841-4-D6713 1997 149'.96'09-dC21 96-51477 The University of Minnesota is an equal-opportunity educator and employer. To Florence, Antoine, Cbloe, and Aurelien This page intentionally left blank Structuralism is not a new method, it is the awakened and troubled consciousness ofmodern thought. Michel Foucault This page intentionally left blank Contents Preface xiii Acknowledgments xv PartI. First Fissures 1. Chomskyism-New Frontiers? 3 2. Derrida or Ultrastructuralisrn 17 3. Derridean Historicization and Its Erasure 32 4. Benveniste: The French Exception 42 5. Kristeva and Barthes Reborn 54 6. Durkheim Gets a Second Wind: Pierre Bourdieu 66 7. 19 67- 19 68: Editorial Effervescence 76 8. Structuralism and/or Marxism 88 9. Media Success: A Criticism-fed Flame 99 ix x Contents Part II. May I968 and Structuralism; or, The Misunderstanding 10. Nanterre-Madness 107 11. jean-Paul Sartre's Revenge 112 12. Lacan: Structures Have Taken to the Streets! 122 13. Institutional Victory: The University Conquered 14. Vincennes: The Structuralist University 15. Journals: Still Going Strong 154 16. The Althusserian Grid: A Must 17. The Althusserian Grid: A Bust 179 Part III. Structuralism between Scientism, Ethics, and History 18. The Mirage of Formalization 19. From Explosive Literary Mourning to the Pleasure of the Text 200 20. Philosophy and Structure: The Figure of the Other 21. The Reconciliation of History and Structure 227 22. Foucault and the Deconstruction of History (1): The Archaeology ofKnowledge 234 23. Foucault and the Deconstruction of History (Il): Discipline and Punish 247 24. The Golden Age of New History 260 Part IV. The Decline 25. Lost Illusions (1): The Gulag Effect 26. Lost Illusions (Il): Extenuated Scientism Contents xi 27. Lost Illusions (III): The Return of Ethics 28. From Reproduction to Regulation: Heirs to Keynes and Althusser, and the Crisis 288 29. A Middle Path: The Habitus 3°1 30. Geography: A Latecomer Discovers Epistemology 3 1 2 3I. The Subject; or, The Return of the Repressed 32. Michel Foucault: From Biopower to an Aesthetics of the Self 336 33. An Autonomous Subject 35° 34. History Returns 35. The Master Thinkers Die 36. The Crisis of Universalist Models and Disciplinary Retrenchment 391 37. Structural Naturalism 397 38. Assimilating the Program 40 8 Part V. Time, Space, the Dialogic 39. Clio in Exile 40. A Topo-Logic 437 41. For a Dialogic 445 Appendix: List of Interviewees 453 Notes 459 Index This page intentionally left blank Preface Were there many structuralisms or simply one structuralism? By the end of the decades of structuralism's triumph described in the first vol ume of History ofStructuralism, it had become clear that structural ism wove a reality of different logics and individuals resembling a disparate fabric more than a school. However, there were a specific orientation and many dialogues indicating a "structuralist moment." In the mid-sixties, both Louis Althusser and Michel Foucault were try ing to bring together the most modern social science research around an effort at philosophical renewal that came to be known as struc turalist. In 1966, these efforts reached their apex. By 1967, cracks started to appear. It became clear that the re groupings of the first period were often artificial, and a general with drawal of sorts began at this point. Certain of the players sought less trodden paths in order to avoid the epithet "structuralist." Some even went so far as to deny ever having been a structuralist, with the excep tion of Claude Levi-Strauss, who pursued his work beyond the pale of the day's fashions. Paradoxically, while structuralists were distancing themselves from what they considered to be an artificial unity, the media were discovering and aggrandizing this unity. This period of deconstruc tion, dispersion, and ebb, however, only quite superficially affected the rhythm of structuralist research. Research continued elsewhere, in xiii xiv Preface the university, and obeyed another temporal logic. May 1968 had contributed to structuralism's institutional success, and this played an essential role in assimilating the program that had lost its blazened banner of a counterculture in revolt to become one of the theoretical, but unarticulated, horizons of social science research. Acknowledgments I would like to thank all those who were kind enough to agree to be interviewed. These interviews were entirely transcribed and their con tribution was absolutely fundamental to this project of writing this history of French intellectual life. The specifics of the area and current affiliation of each of the interviewees are to be found in the appen dix. Those interviewed were Marc Abeles, Alfred Adler, Michel Agli etta, Jean Allouch, Pierre Ansart, Michel Arrive, Marc Auge, Sylvain Auroux, Kostas Axelos, Georges Balandier, Etienne Balibar, Henri Bartoli, Michel Beaud, Daniel Becquemont, Jean-Marie Benoist, Alain Boissinot, Raymond Boudon, Jacques Bouveresse, Claude Brernond, Hubert Brochier, Louis-jean Calvet, Jean-Claude Chevalier, Jean Clavreul, Claude Conte, Jean-Claude Coquet, Maria Daraki, Jean Toussaint Desanti, Philippe Descola, Vincent Descombes, jean-Marie Dolmenach, joel Dor, Daniel Dory, Roger-Pol Droit, Jean Dubois, Georges Duby, Oswald Ducrot, Claude Dumezil, Jean Duvignaud, Roger Establet, Francois Ewald, Arlette Farge, jean-Pierre Faye, Pierre Fougeyrollas, Francoise Gadet, Marcel Gauchet, Gerard Genette, jean-Christophe Goddard, Maurice Godelier, Gilles Gaston-Granger, Wladimir Granoff, Andre Green, Algirdas Julien Greimas, Marc Guillaume, Claude Hagege, Philippe Hamon, Andre-Georges Haudri court, Louis Hay, Paul Henry, Francoise Heritier-Auge, jacques Hoarau, Michel Izard, jean-Luc jamard, Jean Jamin, julia Kristeva, Bernard Laks, Jerome Lallement, Jean Laplanche, Francine Le Bret, xv xvi Acknowledgments Serge Leclaire, Dominique Lecourt, Henri Lefebvre, Pierre Legendre, Gennie Lemoine, Claude Levi-Strauss, jacques Levy, Alain Lipietz, Rene Lourau, Pierre Macherey, Rene Major, Serge Martin, Andre Martinet, Claude Meillassoux, Charles Melman, Cerard Mendel, Henri Mitterand, juan-David Nasio, Andre Nicolai, Pierre Nora, Claudine Normand, Bertrand Ogilvie, Michelle Perrot, Marcelin Pleynet, Jean Pouillon, joelle Proust, ]acques Ranciere, Alain Renaut, Olivier Revault d'Allonnes, Elisabeth Roudinesco, Nicolas Ruwet, Moustafa Safouan, Georges-Elia Sarfati, Bernard Sichere, Dan Sperber, Joseph Sumpf, Emmanuel Terray, Tzvetan Todorov, Alain Touraine, Paul Valadier, jean-Pierre Vernant, Marc Vernet, Serge Viderman, Pierre Vilar, Francois Wall, and Marina Yaguello. Others were contacted but were not interviewed: Didier Anzieu, Alain Badiou, Christian Baudelot, Jean Baudrillard, Pierre Bourdieu, Georges Canguilhem, Cornelius Castoriadis, Helene Cixous, Serge Cotte, Antoine Culioli, Gilles Deleuze, ]acques Derrida, Louis Du mont, julien Freund, Luce lrigaray, Francis Jacques, Christian jambet, Catherine Kerbrat-Oreccioni, Victor Karady, Serge-Christophe Kolm, Claude Lefort, Philippe Lejeune, Emmanuel Levinas, jean-Francois Lyotard, Gerard Miller, jacques-Alain Miller, Jean-Claude Milner, Edgar Morin, Therese Parisot, jean-Claude Passeron, ]ean-Bertrand Pontalis, Paul Ricoeur, Jacqueline de Romilly, Francois Roustang, Michel Serres, Louis-Vincent Thomas. I would also like to thank all of those whose difficult task it was to read this manuscript in its early stages and whose comments and suggestions made it possible for me to carry out this undertaking: Daniel and Trudi Becquemont, Alain Boissinot, Rene Gelly, Francois Cese, Thierry Paquot, and Pierre Vidal-Naquet. Finally, for having given me the print runs of a certain number of works of the period, I would like to thank Monique Lulin at Editions du Seuil, Pierre Nora at Editions Gallimard, and Christine Silva at Editions La Decouverte, Part I First